PROMPTINGS Title: Arthur, the Christmas Elf -- A Christmas Adventure Author: Valerie Connelly Publisher: Nightengale Press, 2006 - 68 pages Genre: Children's Fiction, Children's Activities ISBN: 193344923
Arthur, the Christmas Elf is a story book that will keep on giving long after the read-aloud part is done. Fine-tuned through years of retelling it to her own youngsters, author Valerie Connelly’s tale about two self-absorbed children, a storm and Santa’s elf Arthur will help kids gain a new perspective on Christmas gifts in both the giving and getting departments.
The author-illustrated 43-page story section is only the first part of this two-part book, however. In the second part are instructions on how to make the seven craft projects mentioned in the story. These easy-to-make, family-tested projects use materials most people probably have around the house. The instructions are well-organized, easy to follow and include traceable patterns and photographs that illustrate the projects at various stages of completion.
I can see this dual-purpose and prize-winning book being a great addition to the Christmas of any family with kids up to and including teens. The story will probably become a holiday favorite. And the book may be the catalyst for a new tradition of kids and parents (or older siblings) spending quality time together making things in the days before Christmas, and then giving gifts that come more from the heart than the wallet. |
|
READERVIEWS.com Arthur, the Christmas Elf Valerie Connelly Nightengale Press (2006) ISBN 1933449233
Reviewed by Beverly Pechin for Reader Views
“Arthur, the Christmas Elf” is one of the few books you will ever say must adorn your Christmas rituals. Like curling up with "The Night Before Christmas" in front of the tree and sharing a memorable time with your kids, this book will soon become one of the favorite and most asked for in families far and wide. A cup of hot cocoa and the story of “Arthur the Christmas Elf” will make your holiday times complete for years to come. A wonderful collection of not only a beautiful story of friends and family and the true meaning of Christmas but a beautiful way to celebrate the family event with crafting afterwards! It's not often you get two books in one! A touching story takes place during a huge blizzard on Christmas Eve and Arthur, the Elf, rescues the true meaning of Christmas as he saves Timothy and Angie from despair. They band together to keep Christmas alive and well as Arthur and his reindeer friend, Snowflake, fly through the night delivering Christmas magic. I'm not sure if it's more fun to read the wonderful story or later craft the fun items at the end of the book designed to help kids of all ages create their own Christmas magic! Truly a book that will become a must in any family library and resorted back to often throughout the years to come. There are few books that become classics in family tradition, but this one should be in every family's Christmas adventures! “Arthur, the Christmas Elf” would make a wonderful inexpensive gift to a family or teacher. I couldn't imagine being any more excited than to be able to share this wonderful piece of literature with my kids year after year. Keeping family values and family times together during the holiday season will become an easy task, even for the busiest of families.
|
|
FRONT SREET REVIEWS
In the tale of Arthur, the Christmas Elf by Valerie Connelly, two misguided children are reminded of the joy that Christmas can bring to those with open hearts.
Angie Smith has everything a girl could want and has begun to see the traditions of the holidays more as a nuisance than a blessing. When she informs her mother, Anna, that she would rather receive money than gifts for Christmas, Anna becomes exasperated with her daughter's attitude and begins to wonder when Angie lost her Christmas spirit.
Timothy Anderson has survived on second-hand clothes and toys ever since his father died and left behind a family of six. Timothy's grandmother moved in to help out, but her age and frailness prevent her from being of much assistance any longer. Timothy works to help his mother, Marie, support their family, which she finds difficult on the wages she earns as housekeeper to the Smith family.
As a blizzard threatens to extinguish holiday celebrations, Anna Smith and Marie Anderson find themselves stranded alone in Anna's SUV, stuck in a snowdrift. As they wait for help and try to keep warm, the two mothers discover they have more in common than they ever imagined. Anna is alarmed by Angie's nonchalant dismissal of the Christmas season and Marie worries over Timothy's growing hostility toward any reminder of his poverty, Christmas being the most recent.
Meanwhile, Arthur the Christmas Elf, who is Santa's appointed "Keeper of the Endangered Children List," has spotted Angie and Timothy in his magical Christmas Globe. He is determined to delete the two children from the Endangered Children List and restore their faith in the holiday spirit. He sets off with his trusty reindeer, Snowflake, to bring some warmth into the hearts of Angie and Timothy before it is too late.
Connelly's story is meant to be shared as a family. Part of Arthur's strategy for convincing the children is to provide them with ideas of gifts they can make with their own hands for their loved ones. The story is completed with detailed instructions for the reader on constructing gifts like the ones Angie and Timothy made for their own families. The tale, along with the craft instructions, contains colorful illustrations to engage the reader. The crafts emphasize the meaning of the story: that one does not have to lack money and possessions to be poor, and Christmas is not about cherishing gifts, but the people behind the gifts.
While the text of the story is written on a late elementary school/middle school reading level, the message of the story and the craft ideas are more appealing to younger children, which makes it even more important that the book be shared as a family or group. Younger children will enjoy the experience enthusiastically, as my own did, but may become frustrated if they attempt to read the story on their own.
|
|
|
|
|
|
|